Inferring population history from microsatellite and enzyme data in serially introduced cane toads, Bufo marinus


Autoria(s): Estoup, Arnaud; Wilson, Ian J.; Sullivan, Claire; Cornuet, Jean-Marie; Moritz, Craig
Contribuinte(s)

E.W. Jones

Data(s)

01/12/2001

Resumo

Much progress has been made on inferring population history from molecular data. However, complex demographic scenarios have been considered rarely or have proved intractable. The serial introduction of the South-Central American cane Load Bufo marinas in various Caribbean and Pacific islands involves four major phases: a possible genetic admixture during the first introduction, a bottleneck associated with founding, a transitory, population boom, and finally, a demographic stabilization. A large amount of historical and demographic information is available for those introductions and can be combined profitably with molecular data. We used a Bayesian approach to combine this information With microsatellite (10 loci) and enzyme (22 loci) data and used a rejection algorithm to simultaneously estimate the demographic parameters describing the four major phases of the introduction history,. The general historical trends supported by microsatellites and enzymes were similar. However, there was a stronger support for a larger bottleneck at introductions for microsatellites than enzymes and for a more balanced genetic admixture for enzymes than for microsatellites. Verb, little information was obtained from either marker about the transitory population boom observed after each introduction. Possible explanations for differences in resolution of demographic events and discrepancies between results obtained with microsatellites and enzymes were explored. Limits Of Our model and method for the analysis of nonequilibrium populations were discussed.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:61000

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Genetics Society of America

Palavras-Chave #Genetics & Heredity #Y-chromosome Microsatellites #Allele Frequency Data #Drosophila-melanogaster #Ecological Genetics #Mutation-rates #Giant Toad #Bottleneck #Inference #Model #Colonization #C1 #270203 Population and Ecological Genetics #779904 Control of pests and exotic species
Tipo

Journal Article